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I think my nanny candidate used a fake reference

Alison Green

She also very quickly provided me with one reference, a former coworker, but it took her much longer to provide a reference from a parent she’d previously nannied for. Her coworker reference was good, no problems. The parent reference has a highly unusual name and was easily findable on social media. I’m lost.

Media 105
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pushing back on unreasonable reference requests: a success story

Alison Green

I’ve seen a lot of comments/posts on your site about reference companies that are very pushy about trying to get their long surveys completed. That was a hard no for me — my references are doing me a favor, I’m not repaying that by getting them spammed. I just wanted to share a quick success I had today.

Manager 111
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I can’t recommend the colleague who listed me as a reference

Alison Green

Because we were on friendly terms and her manager doesn’t want to be a reference for her, she’s listed me as a reference and says two places where she interviewed might call me. ” But she said it’s too late, she listed me, and can I please tell them she was great to work with.

Manager 105
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should my employer to cover vet bills caused by my job, my terrible coworker listed me as a reference, and more

Alison Green

My terrible coworker listed me as a reference I have received a phone call from a woman in my office. She “forgot” that she put me down as a reference on her resume, and now she is applying to jobs. My gut instinct is to tell any reference calls, “I am not her manager so I can’t tell you about the quality of her work.

Manager 105
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Research: Customer Referrals Are Contagious

Harvard Business Review

New research reveals the surprising power of “referral contagion,” where referred customers not only buy more but also refer 30-57% more new customers than others. This phenomenon, observed across industries, is driven by social factors like the perception of referring as appropriate and the tendency to befriend similar people.

Marketing 143
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Research: How to Build Consensus Around a New Idea

Harvard Business Review

New research suggests that this rejection can be due to people’s lack of shared criteria or reference points when evaluating a potential innovation’s value. Previous research has found that new ideas are seen as risky and are often rejected.

Manager 145
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More Women Work in Nonprofits. So Why Do Men End Up Leading Them?

Harvard Business Review

The term “glass escalator” refers to the finding that men in female-dominated occupations often experience a faster and smoother rise to the upper levels of leadership than women. Why does the male advantage persist? Systemic power dynamics and gender stereotypes are pervasive across industries.

Nonprofit 144